In a blog post, the company outlined its plans to use New York City based Smartling to let people help it handle the translations. This is a similar approach to what Twitter and Facebook have done to localize its sites:

Today we’re taking another step to improve the Path experience for those of you abroad. We have set up a new translation platform, powered by Smartling, which allows you to sign up and edit the languages available for Path, submit translations and work with others to ensure your language is fully supported in future versions of Path.

Currently we are working on translations for Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, German, Swedish, Japanese, Korean and Simplified Chinese. In the future we are planning to add Traditional Chinese, Thai, Arabic, Bahasa Indonesian, Russian, Turkish, Malay, Dutch, Greek, Norwegian Bokmål and English (UK).

By visiting its translation site, you can register for access to become one of the official Path translators:

Currently, Twitter has over 400,000 volunteer translators helping the company localize all of its products for different geographic regions and languages. While Path’s numbers will be infinitely smaller, there are definitely people who take great pride in lending a hand for these types of projects.

The other great part about crowdsourcing tasks like this is that companies can build a tighter community throughout the process, which makes rolling out the app in new languages easier, since there are already pockets of fanbases ready to embrace it.